Egypt's constitution hangs in balance as judges face off against Morsi (+video)

But if that is not the case, Abdel Tawab says Morsi could issue a new constitutional declaration that would allow him to hold a referendum without judicial oversight, although there has been no official statement regarding the issue.

Currently, Egypt is running under the authority of a decree issued by Morsi that gives him a free hand legally and politically until a new constitution is approved and removes his own decisions from judicial review.

That's the essence of the problem. The draft constitution is seen by part of Egypt's population as an attempted Islamist imposition on society and therefore illegitimate. But the persistence of a situation in which Morsi can make up his own rules on the fly is even worse. Some are hoping that the pressure from the judiciary could drive the Muslim Brotherhood and Morsi to make concessions to draw broader national support for the document.

“If the judges hold out and that presents a problem for the holding of the referendum, that’s where a compromise might become necessary,” Dr. Hamid says. “There could be some discussions and negotiations around that in order to ensure there is judicial supervision, but I don’t see any kind of grand bargain or compromise on fundamental issues dividing the opposing camps."

“Obviously the polarization we’re seeing in Egypt today is unprecedented, and there are no signs of a compromise to bring the sides closer together,” he adds.

On Sunday, judges of the Supreme Constitutional Court suspended their work after claiming Islamist protesters supporting Morsi prevented the judges from entering their building, calling it the “judiciary’s blackest day on record.” The court was expected to rule on the legality of the upper house of parliament and the constituent assembly that drafted the nation’s new draft constitution, which could pose an open affront to Morsi.

Morsi has framed his current sweeping powers as necessary to achieve stability and safeguard democracy: Egyptian courts dissolved the first constituent assembly and an elected parliament earlier this year on technical grounds, and Morsi and his camp said that democratically elected institutions are threatened by old regime loyalists in the judiciary and other parts of the bureaucracy.

Opponents, however, accuse Morsi of seizing too much control nearly two years after the overthrow of Hosni Mubarak.